@archivekamala@ShehuSani@KamalaHarris Oga go and rest na only we Nigerians de read your twit ooo congress no see an read becos them better things to do with there time
@IkengaUruagu@AloyEjimakor What about the spirit of igbos killed by ojukwu ideology of biafra it all started by an nnewi man ,manage try make u get sense
@kpakpando_Orsu1 Sunday igboho was offered 50billion to drop Yoruba agitation he collected immediately,mnk was offered 500 billion with oil wells he rejected and choose freedom for alaigbo, sometimes people working with u can frustrate your good effort
@IkengaUruagu When you loose out of a game ,the best option is to rest your case than jumping around .you said you are not ipob again then leave ipob alone and face your lane
The online phase of the #FreeNnamdiKanuNow movement has officially begun. From this moment until October 20, when citizens will march physically to the Aso Rock Villa in Abuja, supporters across the world are taking the protest to the digital space.
This is an open call to all online protesters, activists, citizens, and allies everywhere to turn every platform into a space for truth and resistance. On @X, @Facebook, @Instagram, @TikTok, and beyond, the message must be clear and relentless, #FreeNnamdiKanuNow!
The goal is simply to keep the demand for justice alive and visible every single day until the government ends the unjust and unlawful incarceration of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu. Everyone can play a part by posting, sharing, tweeting, and amplifying the message.
From today, the internet becomes our rally ground a united digital front for freedom and conscience.
We are online; we are everywhere, and we are unstoppable.
#FreeNnamdiKanuNow #MNKOct20
THE SUPREME COURT IS NOT ABOVE THE CONSTITUTION
Many Nigerians wrongly believe “the law is what the Supreme Court says it is.”
That’s false. Section 1(3) of the Constitution is clear — if any act or judgment violates the Constitution, it’s void. Even the Supreme Court cannot legalize illegality.
In criminal law, a discharge and acquittal means total freedom. Section 36(9) says no one shall be tried again for the same offence — that right is sacred and non-derogable.
When the Court of Appeal frees someone (as was done in the case of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu) because the trial court had no jurisdiction, the case is over. You can’t “continue” a case that never legally existed. To attempt it is legal witchcraft — what lawyers call legal necromancy.
Even the Supreme Court once admitted it in Ogbomor v. State (1985) — a void proceeding remains void forever. Mazi Nnamdi Kanu’s case is void.
Detaining someone after discharge is illegal under both the Constitution and Article 7 of the African Charter, which Nigeria has domesticated.
So no, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu’s detention is not “lawful because the Supreme Court said so.” The Constitution is supreme — not the Supreme Court.
Let’s stop worshipping judges and start respecting the law.
#RuleOfLaw #NnamdiKanu #ConstitutionSupreme #Nigeria
@njcNig@NigerianBarz@IBAnews@NGRSenate@officialABAT@GuardianNigeria@DailyPostNGR@SaharaReporters@nigeriantribune@TheNationalNews@StateDept@FCDOGovUK